I love art. Not just looking either. I love reading about it, talking about it, I love the smell of the materials and it is one of the great and simple pleasures of life to buy a new brush (or a roll of canvas/blank sketchbook//new tube of paint/okayallnewartmaterialsarewonderful). I know with the Muddy Colors readers, I am not alone in this. It also means that my list of paintings that I love only grows longer as the years pass, but there are few paintings that stand above the others.

Spring by Lawrence Alma-Tadema is one of those paintings. I am fan of many of his paintings. I find his dedication to history and details appealing and fascinating. Tadema's rendering of different textures is incredible and his willingness to tackle the insane and complex is singular.

I love paintings that give me:

A sense of excellence

A feeling of wonder

A desire to learn more

Inspiration

When a painting does all of these things it feels like there is a energy inside, right in the center of my chest that lifts my soul a little higher. There is nothing else like it. Spring does this for me.

Spring was completed by Tadema in 1894 (some sources say 1895) after 4 years of intermittent work and is 70 1/4 x 31 1/2 inches in size. Not a large painting when you consider all of the detail in the piece. In Victorian England, it was becoming the fashion to send kids out into the country to gather flowers on May 1st. This painting echos that contemporary scene.

It has been speculated that the scene depicts the Cerealia or Ambarvalia, but more recent scholarship leans towards it being a representation of the Floralia, wherein young girls were sent into the country to retrieve flowers and bring them back in procession to honor the goddess Flora and celebrate the coming of Spring. This was done right around the 1st of May as well. There is much that has been written and researched about Spring that I won't relate here, but if you want to read a really in depth analysis, I will include a link at the end of the post.

Let's take a look at some details from this amazing painting because this is one of those paintings that really rewards time spent examining the details.

Patrician class observing the procession from a "reviewing box."

There is so much content, so beautifully portrayed that you can find mini compositions within the larger piece that stand well on it's own.

Be sure to click on these images to enlarge them. Some of the images are very large and have excellent detail.

More exceptional details. Look at the capital of the column on the left of the detail above. The curls of the carved acanthus leaves and spirals are so convincing. The subtle sense of light penetrating the marble is handled perfectly here and the forms are perfect.

Look at the sculpture on the right hand side of the image above. It is a silver sculpture of Bacchus. There is another on the left hand side. Tadema had an extensive collection of photos from his own journeys as well as those he purchased. We can see how he used reference to help construct this painting. See the image below to compare.

Photo from Tadema's collection

One of the things I really love about this painting, and many of his other works, is the depth of interests. While the primary focus in on the central figures, as you follow the procession back, it goes on and on and you see more faces and figure in the shadow, the back into the light. Then a large bronze equestrian statue and further back another bronze sculpture. Even further you see a gorgeous structure with green patina bronzes on top with pink marble columns in support. All of it works together.

Tadema's wife and family members modelled for several of the figures in the painting.

The spandrel in the image above is usually the domain of deities, but here we see a sheep and a cow. It is thought that Tadema added this detail to represent April and May, or Ares and Taurus, the two months that straddle the Floralia festival depicted.

If you want to see this painting in person, it is in the Getty collection in Los Angeles. I managed to get a couple good shots while I was there that have some raking light and reveal a little more of the texture, both in the canvas and the paint strokes.

Again, large images, so be sure to download or give them a click with your browser full screen to see the detail.

Would you like a huge copy of this painting? You can go to the Getty Museum site and download a 53 MB image, almost 10,000 px tall. Click here. Under the small thumbnail on the page you will see the download link. Follow to instructions there to get the image file.

Also, here is the link I mentioned earlier to a very extensive analysis of the painting. Follow the link and you can read online or download a PDF.